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Ding, G and Forsythe, P J (2013) Sustainable construction: life cycle energy analysis of construction on sloping sites for residential buildings. Construction Management and Economics, 31(03), 254-65.

Hertin, J, Berkhout, F, Gann, D M and Barlow, J (2003) Climate change and the UK house building sector: perceptions, impacts and adaptive capacity. Building Research & Information, 31(03), 278–90.

Larrson, N K (2003) Adapting to climate change in Canada. Building Research & Information, 31(03), 231–9.

Lisø, K R, Aandahl, G, Eriksen, S and Alfsen, K H (2003) Preparing for climate change impacts in Norway's built environment. Building Research & Information, 31(03), 200–9.

Lucko, G (2013) Supporting financial decision-making based on time value of money with singularity functions in cash flow models. Construction Management and Economics, 31(03), 238-53.

Mills, E (2003) Climate change, insurance and the buildings sector: technological synergisms between adaptation and migration. Building Research & Information, 31(03), 257–77.

Park, A and Chang, C-Y (2013) Impacts of construction events on the project equity value of the Channel Tunnel project. Construction Management and Economics, 31(03), 223-37.

Plessis, C d, Irurah, D K and Scholes, R J (2003) The built environment and climate change in South Africa. Building Research & Information, 31(03), 240–56.

  • Type: Journal Article
  • Keywords: adaptation; built environment; climate change; construction; efficiency; embodied energy; emissions; mitigation; public policy; South Africa
  • ISBN/ISSN: 0961-3218
  • URL: http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/link.asp?id=x15r19laatp2mg8u
  • Abstract:
    The demands of climate change are appraised in relation to the impacts on and contribution of the built environment in South Africa to climate change. These demands are situated within the broader South African developmental context. The current status and scope of national policy and strategy initiatives aimed, first, at mitigating the role of the built environment in climate change, and, second, at adapting current settlement and construction practices to projected climate change in the country are assessed. Suggestions are made for filling the identified gaps in policy development and research. The paper concludes that climate change is not a major item on the country's research and policy development agendas, and the country is reluctant to take responsibility for its own role in the crisis. Both adaptation and mitigation is happening in an ad hoc manner, often driven by pressures other than climate change, and the task of interweaving the demands of climate change into South Africa's settlement development policies is yet to be attempted in a focussed manner.

Sanders, C H and Phillipson, M C (2003) UK adaptation strategy and technical measures: the impacts of climate change on buildings. Building Research & Information, 31(03), 210–21.

Shimoda, Y (2003) Adaptation measures for climate change and the urban heat island in Japan's built environment. Building Research & Information, 31(03), 222–30.

Steemers, K (2003) Towards a research agenda for adapting to climate change. Building Research & Information, 31(03), 291–301.

Van Reedt Dortland, M, Voordijk, H and Dewulf, G (2013) Real options in project coalitions in Dutch health care: two case studies of construction projects. Construction Management and Economics, 31(03), 266-86.

Zhang, M and Fang, D (2013) A cognitive analysis of why Chinese scaffolders do not use safety harnesses in construction. Construction Management and Economics, 31(03), 207-22.